Music in Childhood Survey

Today I would love your input! I am doing a little research on music experiences in childhood. I know that I had a very musical childhood – we always had instruments to play, we listened to music all the time (including lots of classical), my mom sang to us every night, etc. But I’d love to know a little bit about YOUR experiences with music in your home as a child. Please take a few minutes and fill out this brief survey. Thank you!

Mighty Musicians! (…plus a giveaway!!)

Happy Saturday!

Well as some of you may have noticed, I haven’t been around a lot lately. I’ve been a bit busy….my friend Nichole and I recently wrote a whole new curriculum and taught a new music class for 5- and 6-year-olds. We call it Mighty Musicians and it was a big success! We are so excited to share it with you all, and I’ve been working like crazy getting these lesson plans all ready to go.

Our Mighty Musicians class is similar to the Early Explorers course (and I *promise* to have more of those lesson plans available soon as well!), but geared toward those 5- and 6-year-olds who are able to catch on and then apply the musical concepts a little more quickly than the preschoolers. This class is very fun, and it involves lots of singing and movement and creative play with the music, but it also has some basic piano technique elements involved to give those kids a great and fun intro to piano lessons! At each class, students get to play simple pre-staff notation pieces at the piano, and they also get to compose their very own songs! We learn about some famous composers and their music and just have a blast singing and moving and listening.

We have five lesson plans that will soon be available for this class (for either a week-long camp or a five-week course). Each lesson is for a one-hour session. Our plan is to get a new one up and available each week….so stay tuned!

TODAY, the first lesson plan, Night & Day: Music Tells a Story, is available for purchase on my “Lesson Plans for Sale” page, and we will also be giving away ONE free copy to a lucky reader!!

The format of the lesson plan is a downloadable e-book, which is awesome because once you purchase it you can print out as many copies of the pages as you need for your class. It is 82 pages chock full of awesomeness…aside from the actual lesson plan and teacher’s guide, there are plenty of resources, printables, songs, clipart, and visual aids, and it also includes a ten-page student take-home book! We think you’re going to love it 🙂

So a little about this lesson plan – we talk about how music tells a story! We do this all within the fun theme of “Night & Day.” We go over some basic musical elements, learn a little about Edvard Grieg and a couple of his famous pieces, sing and move to his music, improvise at the piano, write our own compositions using the musical elements we learned about, learn some basic keyboard topography and play a simple piano piece!

Here are some sneak peeks into the lesson plan and its contents –

So would you like to win a FREE copy of this lesson plan? Just leave a comment! You may receive ONE extra entry into the giveaway by posting about this giveaway on your blog or facebook page (leave an extra comment to let me know you did it). Giveaway ends on Friday, July 20 at 11:59 pm Central time. I’ll announce the winner next Saturday.

Giveaway!: High & Low Preschool Music Lesson Plan

Happy Monday, everyone! I am super excited today to announce a giveaway here on The Teaching Studio!

First of all, I’d like you all to meet my friend Nichole:

Nichole is a wonderful teacher and a dear friend. For the past year she and I have been collaborating on and teaching preschool piano camps and classes together. We’ve spent hours planning, brainstorming, writing curriculums, making up songs, creating all sorts of crafts and visual aids, cutting out lots and lots and lots of paper (our husbands see us get out the scissors and lovingly roll their eyes), and enjoying teaching the joy of music to preschoolers. We have just loved it! Our curriculum has changed and evolved over the past year, and we are getting really excited about how much fun this class is! 
The children who attend our class have such a great time. And they are really learning a lot! We love it when their parents tell us that their child has been singing the songs from class all day long! Or when we hear that they have told their parents all about what they have learned.
Well, we really want to share our class with YOU and make it possible for others to share our fun lessons with their own students. We have been working really hard getting our first lesson plan all ready so that others will be able to purchase it as a pdf download. 
Because we are so excited about it, this week we are going to give away TWO free copies of our Spectacular Spring!: High & Low lesson plan!
Now, this is not just a little ol’ lesson plan. This includes a basic lesson plan, a teacher’s guide with lots of teaching tips and suggestions to help you prepare to teach your class, and about fifty pages (yes, fifty) of great resources (songs, clipart, printables, teaching aids, templates, craft tutorials, take-home booklets, etc.) to make your class super fun and memorable.
This lesson plan  includes everything you’ll need to teach an awesome one-hour class about High & Low in music. Everything is based on the theme of Spectacular Spring! We will share a little more about our fun lesson plan throughout the week. For now, these objectives of our lesson plan will give you an idea of what it’s all about! It will be available for purchase next week.
To enter this giveaway, you can do one or more of the following (please leave a separate comment for each entry letting me know that you did it – thanks!):
  • Follow or subscribe to The Teaching Studio
  • “Like” The Teaching Studio on Facebook
  • Follow or subscribe to the Early Expressions Piano blog
  • “Like” Early Expressions Preschool Piano on Facebook
  • Post about this giveaway on your blog or Facebook timeline!
Giveaway ends next Monday, April 16 at 11:59 pm (CDT). We will announce our two winners on Tuesday, April 17. Ready….enter!

Introducing Classical Music to Children

A friend recently emailed a wonderful NPR article to me about introducing classical music to kids. I think it makes an excellent point that children really are so open to experiencing great music, and that we should give them opportunities to listen to and experience the classics. I know that my own son loves music, and especially seems to react wonderfully to the classics – singing classical tunes over and over during playtime, dancing around the room to a Beethoven sonata, listening so intently (and seeming to be so almost moved) by beautiful orchestra works.

I love this paragraph from the article:

The music belongs to children just as much it belongs to “us” — the ones with the years of listening experience, who have already absorbed current conventions of concert-going practice (don’t applaud between movements, obey the dress code, etc.), and who might well have had years of formal training. Classical music isn’t a museum piece to be looked at and not touched, as it were.

From the video included at the end of the article, I also discovered some fun videos for youngsters about classical music. Take a look!

Preschool Piano Camp

Well hello – I am alive and well and am finally jumping back into the blogging world! Last week a piano-teaching colleague and I taught our first ever preschool piano camp. We had so much fun and it was an overall success! Over the next little while I would like to share with you some of the fun games and activities we used to teach these great kids. First, a few things that I learned (or things that I already knew but that got reinforced during this week):

  • Preschool-aged children LOVE music – to them it is a magical, wonderful thing. If taught creatively using a fun, hands-on approach, you will be amazed at how smart they are and how much they can really learn at such a young age!
  • Young children can pick up on musical concepts before needing the full-out explanation. For example, they can learn to clap eighth and sixteenth notes without necessarily knowing that a sixteenth note gets 1/4 of a count!
  • Get out a bunch of fun instruments and a young child will stay busy for a long time – children love exploring different sounds on drums, rhythm instruments, bells, the piano, etc.
  • Never take a late flight (especially when you are pregnant and traveling with a 3-year-old) arriving home at 1:00 am on the day that you lose an hour through daylight savings time, the night before you teach a 9:00 piano camp. 🙂
In planning our curriculum for our camp, my friend and I drew our inspiration from many sources – including some great method books for young beginners, ideas from fellow-bloggers and our own personal teaching experience. Here are some wonderful books that I would highly recommend for young students:

Music for Little Mozarts: Lesson Book 1Music for Little Mozarts – I LOVE the story format of this book and the way that the characters of Beethoven Bear and Mozart Mouse are used. We found that the children at our camp LOVED anything in a story format, and that they learned concepts so well when taught this way.
Lesson and Musicianship 1B: A Comprehensive Piano Method (Celebrate Piano!®)Celebrate Piano – This is a wonderful method book for children. I love that it gets them playing in many different keys/hand positions right from the get-go, and it also emphasizes things like transposition a lot. There are some cute pre-reading songs in this book that we used.
My First Piano Adventure, Lesson Book A with CD (Faber Piano Adventures®)My First Piano Adventures – I recently purchased this book and I love, love, LOVE it! One of its major strengths is that it teaches good, solid piano technique in really fun and creative ways.

Stay tuned for some fun preschool piano activities!

Early Childhood Music Education

guest post by Stephanie Talbot

During my my senior year of my bachelors degree I took two music education courses from Susan Kenney at Brigham Young University. My eyes were opened to a whole new perspective of music education. I volunteered with the BYU Young Musicians Academy for three years. I loved teaching young children music. It is so exciting to see their faces light up when they sing songs together, play games, move to music, and play instruments for the first time.

During the summers while at BYU, I took Musikgarten courses for Babies, Toddlers, Cycles, Musik Makers, and Musik Makers at the Keyboard. I also took Level 1 certification courses in Orff Schurwerk and Kodaly. All of these music education approaches have the same vision and build upon each other.

Children are always listening, learning, and trying to comprehend the world around them. Music education begins in infancy, and there is ample evidence that it begins before birth. The first three years of life are the most important for educating young children. At this time, brain cells are making connections most rapidly. These connections are what give the brain its capacity to grow and learn. What happens in the home has significant impact on the children’s musical performance when they reach Kindergarten. Children’s experiences during the first years of life lay the foundation for learning that will take place when they enter school. Their feelings of importance and security are determined by your approval of them. The music you listen to, the instruments you play, the singing you do, will all influence the child’s future musical tastes and preferences for music making. Research indicates that by age four, 50 percent of the intellectual learning a child will have at age seventeen has already occurred. (Boloom)


Early childhood classes:

I have taught a few early childhood classes each year. The tricky thing is finding a place to do it that is big enough to house the children and their parents. I have co-leased a dance studio before which worked out great. The home is an option–but having enough space for the children/parents to move is essential. If it is cramped then the purpose of the activities becomes less effective. A babies class works great in a home since movement is limited to lifting, tickling, etc.

What can you do as a parent?



1. Create a musical environment. 

Piaget, a music education theorist, said that environment is critical for learning to take place, and a music environment is as important as all other environments. Children will be able to construct their own musical meaning form the musical experiences they have. The role of the teacher and parent is to provide musical environments from which children can construct their own meaning. EXPERIENCE precedes understanding. EXPERIENCE precedes symbols! Include musical toys, tape recorder, songbooks, picture books about music, good recordings. Different kinds of experiences allow children to explore, make choices, and build their own curiosity.

2. Participate in music activities.

Go to a musical play, the symphony, recitals. Sing with your children at family activities.

3. Observe and listen all kinds of sounds!

Sounds of animals, birds, water, rain, etc. (inside, outside, sounds around the home, instruments). Listen to a variety of musical selections (classical, pop, rock, jazz, choral, orchestral, singing from other cultures). Consider checking out a different CD each week from the library and make a special time to listen such as in the car, while you are making dinner, putting them to sleep.

4. Label the different sounds while listening as high sounds, low sounds, fast, slow, violin, piano, trumpet, etc.

3. Participate with your children in musical activities.

Use CD’s and rhythm sticks. If you play an instrument—play it often. If music is valued to you, then it will more likely be valued to them. Your daily modeling creates a model for your children.


Something to do at home:

1. Find 6 matching non-glass containers (Easter eggs, pill bottles, plastic cups taped together)
2. Partially fill 2 containers with salt, 2 with beans, and 2 with pennies (or other materials)
3. Close and secure
4. Place the containers in your child’s environment and encourage a child to shake the containers. (sing a song while they shake, label them as loud or soft, have them try to match the containers to ones with similar sounds. Encourage the child to shake one sound while you find another just like it.)
5. Enjoy! Play is the child’s work!

Guest Contributor: Stephanie Talbot

We are pleased to welcome a wonderful guest contributor this week, Stephanie Talbot. Stephanie is an excellent pianist and a wonderful teacher, and has some great insights into early childhood music education  that she will be sharing with us. We look forward to her wonderful post, and wanted you to get to know her a little bit!

name:
Stephanie Talbot

she is from:
Provo, Utah

she attended:
BYU for her Bachelors and Masters degrees in Piano Performance, recently received her K-12 music endorsement. (has additional training in Musikgarten, Kodaly, and Orff)

currently:
teaches Elementary Music in Provo School District (Kodaly emphasis)

she loves:
to make music with children, play piano/violin, cook, run, and spend time with her 30 nieces and nephews!

she recently:
ordered lots of children’s books to sing with and make music with children

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